No, Norwegian and Swedish are North Germanic languages, also known as the Scandinavian languages (as well as Danish, Faroese and Icelandic).
latin
Germanic languages: German, obviously. Also the Scandinavian languages--Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian. And Icelandic, spoken by descendants of people who came from Scandinavia. Also Dutch, Flemish, and Faroese. English is also a Germanic language, in that the basic sentence structure and the most commonly used words are Germanic (even though a greater percent of all English words come from French or Latin).
latin based languages i guess
romance
Germanic languages are languages spoken in Europe and North America. Germanic languages ARE like: German, Swedish, Norwegian, English, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Welsh, Scottish, etc. Languages that are NOT Germanic are like: Irish, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, Hungarian, Greek, Italian, Latin, Baltic languages, Slavic languages, any Latino, Asian, or Middle Eastern language, Hebrew, any African language, etc.
Origin of Vincent: Latin (Vincentius) Usage of Vincent: English, Dutch, French, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Slovak
All Latin related languages, such as French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese All Germanic languages, such as English, German, Norwegian, Swedish, Dutch All Slavic languages, such as Russian, Polish, Czech, Serbo-Croat. Many other European languages, such as Greek and Gaelic. Most languages spoken in Northern India, such as Hindi, Oria, etc Finally Persian and/or Farsi, spoken in Iran. hoped this helps.
All romance languages branched off from Latin.
latin
The Romance languages are all based on Latin, since they all evolved from Latin. There are dozens of Romance languages, but most are no longer spoken. The most common living Romance languages are:AragoneseAromanianArpitanAsturianCatalanCorsicanEmiliano-RomagnoloFrenchFriulanGalicianItalianLadinoLeoneseLombardMirandeseNeapolitanOccitanPiedmontesePortugueseRomanianRomanshSardinianSicilianSpanishVenetianWalloon
The Related Link below shows the Indo-European languages and their development. The most common Indo-European languages are: Afrikaans Bulgarian Czech Danish Dutch English Farsi French German Greek Hindi Icelandic Italian Latin Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Ukrainian Yiddish
22 languages (not all come in pocket size): Chinese (Mandarin) Croatian Danish Dutch Finnish French German Greek (Classical) Greek (Modern) Hebrew Italian Japanese Korean Latin Norwegian Polish Portuguese Russian Spanish Swedish Turkish Vietnamese